The pitch for Berlin-based Endel is pretty straightforward, according to its co-founder and CEO Oleg Stavitsky.
âThe way I usually describe Endel is: This is a technology that is built to help you focus, relax and sleep,â Stavitsky told me. âOf course, the way we do that is a little more complicated than that.â
The startup is announcing today that it has raised $5 million in Series A funding led by Kevin Rose of True Ventures, with participation from SleepScore Ventures, Techstars Ventures (Endel was part of the Techstars Music Accelerator), Impulse Ventures, Plus 8 Equity Partners, Waverley Capital, Amazon Alexa Fund, Target Global and various angel investors.
Stavitsky said that the team prevously worked together on childrenâs app company Bubl. After selling Bubl, Stavitsky said they began to explore the opportunities around sound â after all, he noticed the growth of playlists designed to help with things like sleep and focus, as well as the growth in mindfulness apps.
âWhen we started, we said, âLetâs just build this machine that can generate ambient music,'â he recalled. But he said that as the team did more research, they realized, âIt has to be personalized. It cannot just be one song or one playlist or one soundscape. It really depends on the space youâre in.â
So thatâs essentially what Endel has built. The startup says its Endel Pacific technology creates âsound environmentsâ designed for your needs â whether thatâs focusing, sleeping, relaxing or just when youâre on-the-go. Those environments are shaped, in part, by things like the time of day and the weather, as well as the userâs heart rate and motion.
Image Credits: Endel
Rose said he was excited by âthis idea of the closed loop system that uses real-time feedback to manipulate and change the body in a very positive way.â And he emphasized that Endel is âbacked by science.â
Stavitsky said Endelâs approach draws a several areas of science, including research around circadian rhythms (so that it complements where you are in your daily sleep cycle), the pentatonic scale (so that its sounds are pleasant) and sound masking (so that youâre less likely to hear anything distracting).
The company is working with partners to do more to validate the science behind its approach, but it says itâs already applied the experience sampling method developed by psychologist Mihaly Csikszentmihalyi (who developed and wrote the book on the concept of flow) to show that its sound environments can lead to a 6.3x increase in concentration and a 3.6x decrease in anxiety.
I tried it out myself, listening to Endelâs mix of soothing music and white noise as I working yesterday (including, of course, as I was writing this post). I wonât claim that I felt a dramatic increase in energy or focus, but as time went on, I noticed was working for a longer period of time than I normally do without getting distracted.
Endel CEO Oleg Stavitsky
The startup has released apps for iOS, Apple Watch, macOS, Amazon Alexa, and Android, and it has been downloaded nearly 2 million times. A subscription costs $29.99 per year.
Stavitsky said Endel is also building a significant business around partnerships, for example by working with Japanâs ANA Airlines to feature its technology on planes, and there are supposedly deals with automakers and smart speaker manufacturers as well.
The startup has also signed a deal with Warner Music to algorithmically create songs and albums. Stavitsky said heâs hoping to do more work with musicians, so that when they release new music, there can be a traditional album but also âa functional, adaptive album that is available to you as a soundscape when you have to work, when you want to go to sleep.â
âThe big vision is to ultimately go beyond sound,â he added â starting with an Apple TV app due later this year that incorporates video.
Endel has now raised a total of $7.1 million.
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